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The Saint Geroge Medal of the BND

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    The Saint Geroge Medal of the BND

    When I acquired this medal recently I was not at all certain what it was. In fact, none of the collectors that I asked were able to identify it either. But I have now succeeded in confirming that this is "The Saint George Medal" of the Bundesnachrichtendienst, the foreign intelligence service of the Federal Republic of Germany. I'll present it here for the reference of the Forum members, just in case any of you (like me!) never heard of this medal before.

    Background:
    The Bundesnachrichtendienst ("BND") is Germany's equivalent of the Central Intelligence Agency or Great Britain's MI-6. It was founded on April 1, 1956, with its first President being Reinhard Gehlen, a former General of the Abwehr.

    Description:

    There are two versions of the St. George Medal. This example is the first style. The medal is die struck in bronze, and is 5 cm in diameter. This example is contained within its original fitted case, which is covered in dark brown leatherette and displays a gold border on the lid. A fitted compartment holds the medal, and a silk ribbon placed beneath the medal allows it to be lifted out of the case. A label on the bottom of the case bears a hand-written number that matches the impressed number of the medal.

    Obverse:
    A superb relief rendering of St. George slaying the dragon (the photos that I'm posting do not do justice to the beauty of this medal!).

    Reverse:
    The reverse of this first version of the medal displays a laurel wreath and the date "March 31, 1956", both raised out from the surface of the medal. At the bottom of the medal is a separately impressed number that presumably corresponds to a recipient.

    Criteria for the award of the medal:

    The St. George Medal is awarded to BND officers for long service. However, it may also be awarded to "selected" officers of foreign intelligence services.

    Second version of the St. George Medal:
    The second version of the medal is identical on the obverse.However, the reverse of the second version is blank except for the laurel wreath. The second version does not bear the date of "March 31, 1956" or an individually impressed number.

    Points of Note:

    The introduction of the medal, and its design, were initiated by General Gehlen.

    An obvious question is why the reverse of the medal bears the date of "March 31, 1956", when the actual date of the founding of the BND was one day late, on April 1, 1956? Here is what I was informed by the BND itself in a recent letter that I received:
    "As you mentioned, the correct official date associated with the formation of the Bundesnachrichtendienst is April 1, 1956. However, the wrong date had been impressed on the medals for some time in the past. Unfortunately, the reason for this mistake has not passed on."
    Although the letter refers to the date as "impressed", it is, as noted, actually in raised relief on the medal.
    Whatever the reason for the incorrect date, the original stock of the medals were obviously awarded and, when they ran out, the second version was ordered, which eliminated the date altogether.
    Additionally, the BND advised me that it did not have any information as to whom this specific medal was awarded.
    Finally, I found only one public reference to an actual award of the St. George Medal, in which it was announced that the medal had been awarded to Heinz Paul Felfe, Chief of Counter-Intelligence of the BND. However Felfe, who had been an SS Obersturmfuhrer during the war, had been captured at the war's end by the Soviets. Apparently he was convinced in some way to work for the KGB. As such, the man who was the BND's Chief of Counter-Intelligence was in fact a Soviet spy. He was arrested in 1961, placed on trial in 1963 (presumably after two years of interrogation), sentenced to 14 iyears in prison, but exchanged in 1969 for three West German students who had been arrested in the Soviet Union for espionage. He died in 2008.
    Attached Files

    #2
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      #3
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        #4
        I got this Pic sent from another Forum Member a while ago and the Date was the last day of Organisation Gehlen, so I asked some others and I think it's a Farewell Present for old Members of Gehlen for Faithfull Service and maybe given to Lot's of People who switched over to the BND on April 1st. Sadly I never got a proofed Info on this, as nobody seems to be worked for them.

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          #5
          Hi Nico....
          I'll bet that you received the photo from a Forum member that I had asked for help in identifying the medal. That's the great thing about this forum !

          The date of March 31 as the last date for the Gehlen Organization is interesting. The only thing that I can say is that the identification of this medal as one that is given for long service in the BND is taken directly from a letter that I received fro the BND itself in which the medal (based upon these same photos) was identified, and its history and purpose described, by a member of the BND.

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            #6
            Maybe also an interesting story:
            Headquarters of the Organization had since 6 December 1947 the former "Rudolf Hess settlement" in Pullach near Munich. This date gave the BND headquarters nicknamed "Camp Nicholas," After St. Nicholas. Dec. 6th is the Nicholas Day, where you place a Boot outside of your Door to receive small Gifts. I don't know if you know that Tradition in the States too.

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              #7
              Had not heard of that tradition.
              I think we should start it here!

              I would also like to note, in connection with this medal, that the first thing that I did in attempting to identify it and to obtain information about it was to ask the three moderators of this section of the forum. While the medal was something of a mystery to all of us, the three of them provided extremely helpful thoughts, suggestions and feedback. I appreciate it, gentlemen!

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                #8
                They want to move to their new Location in Berlin after the Construction is finished. I don't know if they leave a Part in Pullach. In the Moment they're located in the old Gardeschützenkaserne in Berlin. This Complex was used by the US Forces as Roosevelt Bks. up to 1994 when they left Berlin. This was a very sad day.

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                  #9
                  Bill,

                  Thanks for posting this well researched and beautifully illustrated thread.

                  I found it very informative.

                  Well done Sir!

                  All the best,
                  TJ

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                    #10
                    Bill,

                    Glad to see that you have confirmed the sellers story on this medal. Thanks very much for your explanation of it history. Now if I see one, I will know that I should buy it!

                    Regards,

                    Gordon

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                      #11
                      Thomas and Gordon, both of you, together with Ralph, were of tremendous help to me when I was trying to firmly identify this medal, and I am extremely grateful to all three of you.

                      It was truly gratifying to receive the letter from the BND about this medal, and yet......

                      Two things have stuck in my mind since I created this thread:

                      The first is Nico's statement that 31 March 1956 marked the end of the Gehlen Organization. The second is an observation that you made, Gordon, in an earlier pm to me when I was trying to investigate this piece. You made the very insightful comment that the case did not look like something that would have been used for an award of the BRD government.

                      And so I've been wondering.....

                      Could a medal of this design have been created, as Nico suggested, as a farewell memento for members of the Gehlen Organization? Then subsequently, with the die for the medals already in existence, General Gehlen resurrects the medal to serve as a long service award of the BND? That would certainly explain both the incongruous date on the medal and the non-governmental case.

                      I suppose that this may be something of a lingering mystery.
                      At least for awhile!
                      I do not consider myself yo have reached the end of my research efforts on this!

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                        #12
                        The research continues:
                        Any casual newspaper reader knows that 1963 was a banner year for spy cases, but one of the most significant received the least attention in the United States, considering that it deeply involved the CIA. On July 11, in a Karlsruhe courtroom, Judge Kurt Weber sentenced three former West German intelligence agents to prison terms for spying for the Soviet Union.

                        Heinz Felfe, forty-five, drew fourteen years. Hans Clemens, sixty-one, got ten years. Erwin Tiebel, sixty, their courier, got off with three years. The trio had confessed to delivering 15,000 photographs of top-secret West German intelligence files and twenty spools of tape recordings to Soviet agents in East Berlin.

                        All three had been employed by the West German Federal Intelligence Agency (FIA), better known as the "Gehlen organization" for its founder and chief, the mysterious ex-Nazi general, Reinhard Gehlen. The defendants confessed they had systematically betrayed state secrets from 1950 until their arrest in 1961.

                        Ironically, their work was so pleasing to both sides, that shortly before their arrest Felfe and Clemens received citations for ten years of meritorious service from both of their employers. From General Gehlen they received a plaque bearing an illustration of St. George slaying the dragon. From Alexander N. Shelepin, then Chairman of the Soviet KGB,*17 they got a letter of commendation and a cash bonus.

                        As Judge Weber summed it up succinctly: "For ten years the Soviet intelligence service had two experienced spies sitting right in the center of the enemy's organization."

                        Since the Gehlen organization was financed and controlled by the United States Central Intelligence Agency, the Felfe-Clemens Tiebel case meant nothing less than that the CIA's most vital European subsidiary had been penetrated at the top, virtually from its inception.

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                          #13
                          UPDATE:

                          I just received this communication from the Historical Section of the BND:

                          Dear Mr. Dienna,
                          Thank you for your letter concerning the Medal "Heiliger Georg" of the Bundesnachrichtendienst.

                          The BND history staff is preparing an article on the medal which will be published in 2012. You will receive a copy as soon as it is available.
                          If there is any interest here, I'll post a copy of the article once I receive it.
                          I would certainly be happy to share copies of the article as well if you are interested.

                          Of course, with my luck, "published in 2012" will mean "published at 11:58 pm on 31 December, 2012" !

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                            #14
                            Bill,

                            This is great news. Wonderful to have the name of this medal as well. I would certainly like to have this article published on the forum and have a copy of it for myself.

                            Regards,

                            Gordon

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                              #15
                              Bill,

                              I share Gordon's enthusiasm and look forward to more information on this little known aspect of Cold War history.

                              All the best,
                              TJ

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